2010
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2656.2009.01645.x
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Resource partitioning or reproductive isolation: the ecological role of body size differences among closely related species in sympatry

Abstract: Summary1. Body size differences among coexisting related species are common, but the actual effect of these differences in mitigating interspecific interactions, such as resource competition and reproductive interference, is poorly understood. 2. Local assemblages of the ground beetle genus Carabus (subgenus Ohomopterus) typically consist of two or more species of varying sizes. Through foraging and mating experiments using four Ohomopterus species in parapatry and sympatry, we examined whether interspecific b… Show more

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Cited by 51 publications
(53 citation statements)
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“…If an interspecific difference in a specific trait prevents the occurrence of reproductive interference, that trait difference may persist in coexisting species in nature as a result of ecological or evolutionary process (e.g., Okuzaki et al 2010;Eaton et al 2012). On the one hand, species with similar traits may exclude each other, and species may be sorted in the way that local assemblage consists of species with persistent trait difference.…”
Section: Consequences Of Reproductive Interferencementioning
confidence: 99%
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“…If an interspecific difference in a specific trait prevents the occurrence of reproductive interference, that trait difference may persist in coexisting species in nature as a result of ecological or evolutionary process (e.g., Okuzaki et al 2010;Eaton et al 2012). On the one hand, species with similar traits may exclude each other, and species may be sorted in the way that local assemblage consists of species with persistent trait difference.…”
Section: Consequences Of Reproductive Interferencementioning
confidence: 99%
“…On the one hand, species with similar traits may exclude each other, and species may be sorted in the way that local assemblage consists of species with persistent trait difference. For example, if a small body size difference results in costly interspecific copulation between two closely related species, species with similar body sizes may exclude each other, resulting in a species assemblage with a persistent body size difference (Okuzaki et al 2010). On the other hand, if reproductively interacting species coexist for sufficiently long time without extinction of either species, adaptive evolution may reduce the cost of reproductive interference through a mechanism such as reproductive character displacement in mate recognition traits (e.g., Lemmon 2009;Bargielowski et al 2013;Okamoto and Grether 2013).…”
Section: Consequences Of Reproductive Interferencementioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Competition is important in laboratory studies (e.g., Currie et al, 1996). There are studies of the role of competition in speciation but for a few species in nature (Sota et al, 2000;Okuzaki et al, 2010). There are few if any studies on the role of competition in structuring ground beetle communities along environmental gradients, even though such studies are crucial for the understanding the assembly of beetle communities.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These results suggest that endogenous selection via reproductive interference facilitated competitive exclusion (Okuzaki et al. 2010). Quantification of reproductive isolation via ecological differentiation (e.g., Ramsey et al.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%